Phospholipid flippases enable precursor B cells to flee engulfment by macrophages.
Katsumori SegawaYuichi YanagihashiKyoko YamadaChigure SuzukiYasuo UchiyamaShigekatzu NagataPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2018)
ATP11A and ATP11C, members of the P4-ATPases, are flippases that translocate phosphatidylserine (PtdSer) from the outer to inner leaflet of the plasma membrane. Using the W3 T lymphoma cell line, we found that Ca2+ ionophore-induced phospholipid scrambling caused prolonged PtdSer exposure in cells lacking both the ATP11A and ATP11C genes. ATP11C-null (ATP11C -/y ) mutant mice exhibit severe B-cell deficiency. In wild-type mice, ATP11C was expressed at all B-cell developmental stages, while ATP11A was not expressed after pro-B-cell stages, indicating that ATP11C -/y early B-cell progenitors lacked plasma membrane flippases. The receptor kinases MerTK and Axl are known to be essential for the PtdSer-mediated engulfment of apoptotic cells by macrophages. MerTK -/- and Axl -/- double deficiency fully rescued the lymphopenia in the ATP11C -/y bone marrow. Many of the rescued ATP11C -/y pre-B and immature B cells exposed PtdSer, and these cells were engulfed alive by wild-type peritoneal macrophages, in a PtdSer-dependent manner. These results indicate that ATP11A and ATP11C in precursor B cells are essential for rapidly internalizing PtdSer from the cell surface to prevent the cells' engulfment by macrophages.